Palinville

©Anchorage Daily News/Stephen Nowers, 2008

©Anchorage Daily News/Stephen Nowers, 2008

I watched the governor’s acceptance speech last night with several hundred rowdy locals at Tailgaters Sports Bar and Grill in Wasilla. I was surprised by the number of media, not the size of the crowd.

I counted more than 25 media types (a conservative estimate), including photojournalists (5, including me), videographers, reporters, producers, video sound techs. Publications from around the world were represented, including the New York Times and the London Times, and while I saw a couple of reporters snapping pictures, and more than a few hand-held recorders, I don’t think too many journalists were working the multimedia angle.

Not that I was either, really. I just plugged a mic into my M-Audio and let it run for an hour to capture the noise of the room. While there was cheering, some of the biggest lines played referenced Wasilla like this one about her early career:

“And when I ran for city council, I didn’t need focus groups and voter profiles because I knew those voters and I knew their families, too.”

I think of that line and the reaction as the heart of the very quick audio slide show I produced later Wednesday night. The room’s reaction wasn’t partisan but personal and I felt like it gave my audio track sense of place.

There was so much build to the speech I thought there would be some return to normalcy when it was over. No chance. Gov. Palin’s speech was like a false summit on a long hike: you get to the top only to realize just how much more there is to go.

Early November at least, in this case.

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